5/17/2023 0 Comments Kairon irse ujubasajuba review![]() Otherwise all of our touring plans have been postponed. We are still planning to play three shows here in Finland before the end of the year. Niko: We were supposed to be touring this Autumn in Europe, but obviously we had to cancel it. What were your original plans for the album launch? What did you do instead? I imagine it isn’t any different for you. The reception has been good and it’s nice that our listeners have found our new album from the vast quantity of new releases.Į&D: The COVID-19 pandemic has brought the entire music industry to a standstill. Congratulations on the fantastic new album. Anoop Bhat had the rare chance to speak to Niko Lehdontie and talk at length about the band’s origins, the evolution of their sound, their individual influences and of course, the new album among other things.Į&D: Hello Niko! Hope you and the band are doing well. The band has remained at the forefront of the European psychedelic music scene, and has, as a result, attracted a dedicated following over the years. Released via the band’s long-time label Svart Records, Polysomn is Kairon IRSE!’s third-full length album. You can probably tell by now that Kairon IRSE! isn’t just another heavy psychedelic band they’re very much the progenitors of the next chapter in psychedelic music, and Polysomn makes for a compelling declaration.Three years after Ruination, psychedelic-rock quartet from Finland, Kairon IRSE!, are back with a fantastic new album. Yet it all comes together so beautifully, as a singular idea, never lacking in harmony or compatibility. To me, what is ingenious about Kairon IRSE!’s music is that, in all its fuzzy eccentricity, every movement is still a meticulous, highly-inventive collage of contrasting musical ideas and textures. The stunning album artwork by Jenna Hapaaharju is probably a recreation of one such world. Thematically, much of the album feels like a retelling of a glorious, other-worldly voyage – a metaphysical journey into alternate universes – constantly discovering new worlds, each one more breathtaking than the last. Sure, the album is filled with moments that could remind you of My Bloody Valentine, LSD and the Search of God, Candy Claws or even Mercury Rev, but it’s always showcased in a new light, with a new perspective, deliberately shunning every known genre-trope. The downright ease with which these Finns masterfully meld different soundscapes together is nothing short of extraordinary. ![]() Be it the dream-poppy, cascading drone of ‘Hypnogram’ or the Radiohead-like, upbeat jam of ‘Psionic Static’ – the band is constantly exploring newer recesses of their sonic landscape, and emerging with spectacular results. The songs on this album exude a greater sense of purpose, forever moving forward and expanding on every little facet of the band’s complex sound. They subject that same explosive energy to a seemingly elevated process of song-writing. Polysomn sees the band pendulum back to their Ujubasajuba days. It was one of my favourite records of that year. The resultant music was just as textural and luxurious, but with a pulsating drive and an unmistakable jazz-rock structure to it. The band started incorporating a lot more free jazz and Canterbury progressive rock elements into their song-writing. Ruination, the band’s second full-length which took 2 good years to write, was agreeably a more focused effort. That album was largely born out of improvisation and jam sessions a trait they consciously gave up while writing the follow-up. Ujubasajuba, the band’s (originally) Bandcamp-only debut LP, was an exercise in dense, shoegaze-y psych-rock music. While the band most notably broke the international scene only in 2017, they actually have been around for over a decade working, refining and redefining their oddball brand of sometimes-prog, sometimes-shoegaze heavy psychedelic music. Led by Oranssi Pazuzu’s Niko Lehdontie, the band has remained at the forefront of the European psychedelic music scene with two solid full-length albums under their belt, Polysomn being their third musical effort. Riding on the incredible success of their last album and their much-lauded appearance at the 2018 edition of Roadburn – Kairon IRSE!, the psychedelic-rock quartet from Seinäjoki (Finland) are back with a brand new album.
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